Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026--San Antonio
This Strange Eventful History by Claire Messud was on many lists of top books of 2025 and was longlisted for the Booker Prize. It is historical fiction related to several generations of one extended family, but it concentrates on one particular generation--that of the married couple Francois and Barabra while going backwards to tell the stories of their parents and siblings and forwards to tell the stories of their own children and grandchildren. The novel begins in the early 1940s. Gaston, a French navel officer, has been recently moved from an assignment in Beirut to Salonica (Thessaloniki today). But Hitler's armies are moving into France quickly and Paris is expected to fall when they do. Gaston has decided to send his wife and children to Algeria which is where they grew up, fell in love, and married. The story backtracks to tell about life in Algeria before the war and continues through the war, through the uprisings against colonial rule in Algeria, telling of their son's successes in education, and follows what is happening within the family as Francois, the son, decides that his furture must be in America (where he eventually meets and marries Barbara). Throughout the family history, there are cultural problems resulting in misunderstandings and hurt feelings, times of discrimination, times of tension, feelings of failure in various ways, examples of sacrifice, examples of misinterpretation of why things are happening, etc. There is a point in the middle of the novel where so much detail is outlined so quickly that reading the book became a bit of a drag. But, in general it is a good story and is exciting at times. The ending becomes a shocker. Overall, I gave the book 4 stars out of 5 (although I wavered at times in thinking I should go half a star lower).